Dagobert of Pisa was named Patriarch in 1100, and attempted to turn the new state into a theocracy, with a secular state to be created elsewhere, perhaps in Cairo.
Dagobert of Pisa, archbishop of Pisa and Latin patriarch of Jerusalem (died 1105)
Pisa | University of Pisa | Leaning Tower of Pisa | Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa | Province of Pisa | Dagobert Sigmund von Wurmser | Dagobert I | Council of Pisa | Dagobert of Pisa | Pisa Charterhouse | Pisa Centrale railway station | Dagobert | San Francesco (Pisa) | Museo di storia naturale e del territorio dell'Università di Pisa | Montemagno, Pisa | Jehiel ben Samuel Pisa | Galileo's Leaning Tower of Pisa experiment | Dagobert Peche | Dagobert II | Dagobert Biermann | council of Pisa | ''Ambulocetus natans'' display in Pisa Charterhouse | A.C. Pisa 1909 |
In 1102 Dagobert of Pisa was deposed as Patriarch by the papal legate, Robert Cardinal of Paris, on charges of misconduct brought by the King of Jerusalem, Baldwin I.